Children with traumatic trauma experience trauma in various ways. The most important thing is to experience trauma through various eyes. Child temperament and personality may affect the traumatic outcome of children (if any). Response to wounds can also occur after days, days, or weeks after a traumatic event. Symptoms of traumatic reactions may be very personal, depending on the age of the child. Very young children are often afraid to separate from their parents.
Child trauma affects human development and the outcome of life outcome. Plastic brain allows children to adapt to sustained trauma, and if trauma is not resolved, those indications are treated as depression, personality disorder, alcoholism, and other behavioral health disorders It will appear. Whether it is an individual or a cultural group, irreparable traumas can occur in future generations and create intergenerational traumas that are difficult to interrupt. Identifying trauma is only the first step. In order to end the cycle of child's trauma, the child service system and health care providers not only understand the impact of psychological trauma but also use this understanding to provide information to all aspects of children and their families need to do it.
Children with traumatic trauma experience trauma in various ways. The most important thing is to experience trauma through various eyes. Child temperament and personality may affect the traumatic outcome of children (if any). Response to wounds can also occur after days, days, or weeks after a traumatic event. Symptoms of traumatic reactions may be very personal, depending on the age of the child. Very young children are usually very afraid to separate ... whether trauma in childhood causes the symptoms of patients with mental disorders such as schizophrenia or psychosis, or whether trauma occurs in patients Whether to lead schizophrenia or psychiatric disorders. The survey results of many case studies show the links. Several studies have shown that only certain symptoms are affected. I would like to know which symptoms are affected and which childhood trauma affects the patient's symptoms
Trauma, especially early trauma, is a risk factor for posttraumatic stress disorder and the development of psychosis. The aim of this study was to determine the specific relevance between exposure to child abuse, the symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder and current psychosis. Subjects were recruited from public urban hospitals (N = 328, over 90% African Americans). Psychiatric disorders were measured using the MINI International Neuropsychiatric Interview, PTSD was measured using the PTSD scale managed by the clinician, child abuse was measured using the Child Trauma Questionnaire, and lifetime trauma exposure was assessed as a trauma event Measured using a list. Logistic regression analysis showed that child abuse and current posttraumatic stress disorder are statistically significant predictors of psychotic disorders beyond the impact of lifetime trauma burden. Since this is a cross-sectional study, further research is needed to determine the causal relationship of such a model.